At the same time, folks need to develop long term plans.
I'm a Korean so I don't really have a say in this but we're actually studying what white people (jewish people esp) are doing.
My man, who's an IT millionaire, just bought equity into the KoreAm magazine to shore up Korean representation in the media and is paying 25Gs a month out of his own pocket to sponsor and support up and coming Korean American journalists.
I had lunch with my other homie who's a very successful hedgefund partner and board member of KACF NY and he told me that the first year his hedge fund turned a profit his partners all decided to give back some of the profits to the community. The fund is HQ'd in London and his other partners are all brits and they all had clear purpose and destination for their money, like Prince Charles's foundation or whatever and that was the norm for these Brits. But as a Korean American, he never really thought about giving back to the community in the first place and didn't know any legitimate and well-run foundations and initiatives either. That's why now he's very actively engaging in these activities.
And I have a lot of friends in LA, and they told me that ever since Koreans became one of the top tax paying race groups in there (sometime even moreso that jewish people) they've been treated so much better by the police and the govt in general.
All those things I mentioned have happened in the past decade so it's never too late.
I'm a Korean so I don't really have a say in this but we're actually studying what white people (jewish people esp) are doing.
My man, who's an IT millionaire, just bought equity into the KoreAm magazine to shore up Korean representation in the media and is paying 25Gs a month out of his own pocket to sponsor and support up and coming Korean American journalists.
I had lunch with my other homie who's a very successful hedgefund partner and board member of KACF NY and he told me that the first year his hedge fund turned a profit his partners all decided to give back some of the profits to the community. The fund is HQ'd in London and his other partners are all brits and they all had clear purpose and destination for their money, like Prince Charles's foundation or whatever and that was the norm for these Brits. But as a Korean American, he never really thought about giving back to the community in the first place and didn't know any legitimate and well-run foundations and initiatives either. That's why now he's very actively engaging in these activities.
And I have a lot of friends in LA, and they told me that ever since Koreans became one of the top tax paying race groups in there (sometime even moreso that jewish people) they've been treated so much better by the police and the govt in general.
All those things I mentioned have happened in the past decade so it's never too late.